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Section 3 - Personality, behaviour patterns and health

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 August 2016

Andrew Steptoe
Affiliation:
St George's Hospital Medical School, University of London
Jane Wardle
Affiliation:
Imperial Cancer Research Fund, London
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Summary

Readings

Coronary heart disease in the Western Collaborative Group Study: final follow-up experience of 8 years. R. H. Rosenman, R. J. Brand, C. D. Jenkins, M. Friedman, R. Straus and M. Wurm. Journal of the American Medical Association, 233, 872-77, 1975.

Anger-coping types, blood pressure, and all-cause mortality: a follow-up in Tecumseh, Michigan (1971-1983). M. Julius, E. Harburg, E. M. Cottington and E. H. Johnson. American Journal of Epidemiology, 124, 220-33, 1986.

Pessimistic explanatory style is a risk factor for physical illness: a thirty-five-year longitudinal study. C. Peterson, M. E. P. Seligman and G. E. Vaillant. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 55, 23-7, 1988.

Effectiveness of hardiness, exercise and social support as resources against illness. S. C. Ouellette Kobasa, S. R. Maddi, M. C. Puccetti and M. A. Zola. Journal of Psychosomatic Research, 29, 525-33, 1985

Introduction

The theme underlying this set of readings is the role played by personality factors, behavior patterns and coping styles in vulnerability to illness. The idea that personality is relevant to disease aetiology has a long history in psychosomatic medicine, beginning with psychodynamic conceptualisations in which psychic conflicts or specific attitudes were thought to increase risk for particular disorders (Alexander, 1950; Grace and Graham, 1952). These formulations were based predominantly on retrospective assessments using poorly standardised measures, so doubts were raised about consistency, reliability and bias. More recently, hypotheses about specific personality types being linked with particular disorders, as in the ‘cancer-prone personality’ suggested by Temoshok (1987), have been developed using more systematic approaches. It has also been suggested by Friedman (Friedman and Booth-Kewley, 1987) that there might be a ‘disease-prone personality’, a constellation of negative affective traits such as anxiety, depression and hostility that increase disease risk in a general fashion across different medical problems.

Biomedical scientists have remained sceptical of these hypotheses, and this is perhaps not surprising given the inconsistencies in the literature and the failure to link personality and behaviour patterns with credible psychobiological mechanisms. One of the major difficulties has been teasing out cause and effect relationships, since many studies of psychological factors have been carried out on diagnosed groups of patients. The presence of a serious medical condition may lead to changes in psychological factors as the individual faces threats to his or her well-being and the prospect of a curtailed lifespan.

Type
Chapter
Information
Psychosocial Processes and Health
A Reader
, pp. 189 - 199
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1994

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